Fake DDR5 RAM sticks are now using plastic chips to fool buyers

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If DDR5 prices were not painful enough already, counterfeit RAM is now entering the chat. Some fake memory sticks reportedly look convincing enough to fool buyers, right down to plastic chunks disguised as DRAM chips.

Fake DDR5 RAM sticks are now getting disturbingly convincing

Latest reports from Asian PC markets suggest that counterfeit DDR5 modules are rapidly spreading across online stores and gray-market retailers, especially as memory prices continue to climb. The fake sticks are often disguised as legitimate Samsung or SK Hynix modules, complete with cloned labels, serial stickers, and packaging.

注意喚起
DDR5のメモリの偽物が出回ってます。
一見すると普通のメモリですが、実際に搭載されているチップはただの基板、プラスチックの板です。取り外して切断して確認しました。
動作未確認のメモリーとかマジで購入する際は気をつけてください!
4090の悲劇を起こさないように! pic.twitter.com/gcKAjRDUei

— TAKI (@taki_pc_1115) May 10, 2026

Some fake SO-DIMM laptop modules were discovered using dummy plastic pieces shaped like DRAM chips to visually imitate genuine memory layouts. Even more bizarrely, some of these counterfeit sticks are openly being sold as “junk” or “untested” items on marketplaces like Yahoo Japan, with sellers clearly stating that returns will not be accepted.

In several cases, these modules either failed or operated with significantly reduced memory capacity compared to what was advertised. Some fake sticks reportedly contained recycled or low-grade chips hidden beneath relabeled heat spreaders, while others were simply designed to look convincing enough to pass a quick visual inspection.

DDR5 shortages just unlocked a new hardware nightmare

The timing here is not surprising. DDR5 prices have surged sharply over the past year, largely due to AI-driven memory demand and manufacturers prioritizing enterprise-grade production for servers and accelerators. That price spike has made consumer RAM valuable enough for counterfeiters to aggressively target, especially in markets where buyers rely on third-party sellers or imported hardware deals. And unlike GPUs or CPUs, RAM is one of those components most people rarely inspect closely once the system boots.

Experienced PC builders can usually spot suspicious modules by checking things like PCB quality, chip layouts, or labeling inconsistencies. But for the average buyer, fake and genuine memory sticks can look nearly identical. The problem becomes even worse with desktop DDR5 kits, where large heatspreaders completely cover the memory chips underneath. At that point, there is often no easy way to verify what is actually inside unless the system refuses to boot, crashes repeatedly, or someone physically tears the module apart.

And that is what makes this whole thing genuinely concerning. Counterfeit RAM is no longer just cheap knockoff hardware. It is becoming sophisticated enough to fool people until something goes horribly wrong.

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